âI had killed a lot of people in other films,â says Alice Lowe, whose first feature, 2016âs Prevenge, saw her play a pregnant serial killer. âThis time I just felt like I should kill myself.â Agnes, the hero of Loweâs new film, Timestalker, meets many grisly endings. Played by Lowe, sheâs pursuing her dream man through the centuries, from prehistoric forests to 80s New York. But in every era, before true love can blossom, her time is cut short. Then sheâs reincarnated, ready to try again.
Timestalker is a romance. Or is it? Itâs about reincarnation. Or is it? Just as in Prevenge, where a woman grapples with the line between truth and fantasy when she hears her foetus issuing murderous instructions, weâre invited to question whatâs real as weâre immersed in Agnesâs muddled mind. The film is dreamlike: scenes have a powdery, shimmery quality and a surreal theatricality. âI wanted it to be delusional, and that you stay in that delusion, you donât have the bubble burst,â says Lowe. âTheyâre all trapped. The joke with this is that people canât change. Even though theyâre her dreams, sheâs still dying.â
Itâs funny, gory, and asks fascinating questions about obsession and the power of the human psyche. âThe universe that I try to create with my films,â she says, âis dark, but not so dark you feel nihilistic.â
Lowe is a woman of many talents; a writer, director and actor whoâs built cult followings across comedy and horror, beginning with roles in Garth Marenghiâs Darkplace and then in Sightseers, which she wrote with Amy Jump and co-star Steve Oram and was directed by Ben Wheatley. Yet, despite this reputation â and the critical success of Prevenge, which Lowe made while pregnant in real life, Timestalker took seven years to complete. âIndependent film is in so much trouble,â she says. âI had that sense during the pandemic: so many female directors do not get to make a second film.â
In response to film bosses saying it takes £3m to make a first feature, she has advocated for a greater number of smaller grants to be handed out instead. âThere are so many people who just need a first chance to make a smaller-budget film,â she says. âWhy donât we embrace a more punk aesthetic with how we make British films?â
Looking back, the film itself reflects those anxieties. âItâs about reincarnation and hopeless love,â she says. âI think of it as a metaphor for artistic endeavour and chasing a crazy dream. Itâs going to damage you, itâs going to hurt you, and you donât really know if youâre going to get anything out of it. That is my career.â She twisted her ankle on the first day of filming, and worked long hours across a 22-day shoot in Wales, temporarily relocating her family there. âIt wonât happen if youâre not evangelically obsessed with the project,â Lowe says. âIf you donât believe in it, no one else can.â
Agnes embodies that obsession as she hunts down her man, despite his lack of interest. At the same time, she herself is pursued by a sinister character played by Nick Frost. When we speak, the furore around Baby Reindeer is at a peak, and Lowe suggests Timestalker is the perfect companion piece for the Netflix drama: a glimpse inside the stalkerâs head. âThereâs darkness there, but sheâs concealing it all with fluffy rainbows and chiffon,â she says. âItâs about the chase. The fantasies are more pleasurable than the actual interactions, because the actual interactions donât go well. To me, thatâs perfect film-maker territory because most film-makers are obsessive.â
Lowe grew up in Coventry, the daughter of two teachers who saw education as the path to success, but also loved watching TV. She got her own tiny black-and-white set as a teenager, and would watch it late into the night, one toe on the power button in case her parents came to tell her off. Sheâd devour late-night animations, Hammer horror and films like Withnail and I, plus any comedy, but especially Vic and Bob.
She loved art too, but steered towards more academic subjects and earned a place studying classics at the University of Cambridge. She got involved with student theatre, making costumes and sets. Invited to audition for Peter Pan, she instead landed the role of Captain Hookâs sidekick Smee, and played it for laughs. âI was the only girl who didnât mind looking repulsive,â she says. âI gave myself yellow teeth and spots.â
She continued with devised theatre during university â its loose, improvised approach suited her â then, at the turn of the millennium, began a momentous collaboration. Starring alongside Matthew Holness and Richard Ayoade, with Paddingtonâs Paul King directing, Lowe became part of the comedy horror universe of Garth Marenghi, performing in two Edinburgh fringe shows that earned an Edinburgh comedy award nomination in 2000, then a win in 2001. That led to their first TV show, Garth Marenghiâs Darkplace, which, 20 years on from its release, remains a cult classic.
Even after this big break, there were signs it might be tougher for Lowe than her male co-stars. âI shouldnât tell this story, but Iâm going to,â Lowe says. â[On] The IT Crowd, all of the boys from Garth Marenghi were given straight offers of main roles, and I had to audition.â She was away working on a show, so the part was given to someone else; she then had to audition for a small cameo. âThat typifies my career,â she says. âThe opportunities that donât get thrown your way as a woman. You can be associated with so many brilliant projects, but people will assume itâs got nothing to do with you.â
Lowe has always challenged sexism when sheâs seen it. âIâve always gotten mouthy about this stuff and it hasnât really helped my career,â she says. âThere was a director who said that women werenât funny. I complained and they fired me. It was the end of that laddie comedy era. They made me feel like I was a mad, difficult woman, but what I was saying was completely rational: you canât say that women arenât funny on a comedy show. You shouldnât be in charge if you think that.â
Lowe appeared in many celebrated 00s comedies, including The Mighty Boosh and Hot Fuzz, but also began making her own short films. She realised that being across every element of a project â from idea to aesthetic to sound â brought a satisfaction sheâd been missing.
Now, she brings that devised theatre philosophy to her sets, inviting improvisation and playfulness. âI donât like to formalise too much what I do, because I get scared that it will actually get worse,â she says. And, as a director, she says âthe atmosphere you create is going to dictate how people are treated. Why shouldnât people be having fun doing it? People make a load of sacrifices. Itâs a very antisocial job.â
She says film funding bodies can get âfreaked outâ when a writer-director wants to star in their own film: âTheyâre like, âOh, we assumed youâd want Kristen Stewart at this stage.â Well I sort of do, because I love Kristen Stewart, but also Iâm scared of Kristen Stewart; Iâm scared of famous people.â
Now, as writer, director and star, sheâs able to execute her creative vision without compromise. âI read something recently saying we need to get rid of the auteur, itâs patriarchal and damaging. But canât women just have a go though, before we get rid of it?â she laughs. âWith hundreds of people contributing, youâre operating by what wins the most votes. Everything becomes the same. If you donât have an auteur, how do we protect against being bland?â
Lowe likes the idea of being âa maverick ⦠a berserkerâ amid the footsoldiers of the film industry. âIâve got an anti-authoritarian streak, for sure,â she says. That manifests in her films, where sheâs drawn to âflawed heroinesâ. Yet sheâs exasperated by the tendency to read characters like Agnes, or Ruth from Prevenge, as moral endorsement. âAgnes is not self-aware. Sheâs karmically naive. If you canât let a woman be that character, thatâs really sad. Sheâs just one character. Itâs not instructions.â
There is a particular pressure on female directors, who are vastly underrepresented in the industry, with only 22% of key creative positions held by women in UK film. âYou get to this point of like: you are carrying the message of womankind on your shoulders, you have the responsibility to tell us what it is to be a woman. And Iâm just like: I donât want to,â Lowe says. âIâm literally going to do the opposite of what youâre expecting me to do now.â
Timestalker is in cinemas from 11 October.